Les Dents de la mer 3 backdrop
Les Dents de la mer 3 poster

LES DENTS DE LA MER 3

Jaws 3-D

1983 US HMDB
juillet 22, 1983

Michael Brody et Sean Brody, les deux fils du chef de la police Martin Brody de la ville plaisancière d'Amytiville, ont bien grandi. Après que leur père ait affronté deux fois la terreur des mers, le Grand Requin Blanc, une espèce animale mangeuse d'hommes de plus de sept mètres de long, ils se sont installés en Floride où ils travaillent pour un célèbre parc aquatique englouti dans la mer, dirigé par Calvin Bouchard. Peu de temps après l'ouverture du parc, l'équipe récupère dans les fonds marins un bébé requin, qui meurt sur les tables du laboratoire scientifique du parc. La mère du requin veut récupérer son petit, et elle sait qu'il se trouve quelque part dans le parc. Celle-ci décide donc de passer à l'attaque et de détruire le Sea World…

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Equipe

Production: Howard Lipstone (Executive Producer)Alan Landsburg (Executive Producer)Rupert Hitzig (Producer)
Scenario: Richard Matheson (Screenplay)Carl Gottlieb (Screenplay)Guerdon Trueblood (Story)
Musique: Alan Parker (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: James A. Contner (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini
En Floride, un grand parc aquatique de divertissement est sur le point d'être inauguré, mais un énorme requin blanc entre dans l'espace de la lagune et commence à semer la panique et la destruction. Tourné en 3D avec un jeune Dennis Quaid dans le rôle de l'héro, à la place de Sheider, le film est une mauvaise production purement de série B ; effets médiocres, totale absence d'idées et crédibilité absolue.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (3)

Potential Kermode

8 /10

When in doubt - point a long stick toward the screen

These 3D ventures are amusing. Whenever the plot slows down a cast member randomly picks up a long stick and points it at the camera.

This film is no exception. Whenever the plot crawls to snails pace characters start pointing long sticks at the camera for no apparent reason.

Doing most of the long stick pointing here is Dennis Quaid and Bess Armstrong - she needs a strong arm to pick random objects up and point them toward the camera as often as she does.

  • Potential Kermode
r96sk

r96sk

5 /10

Yeah... not good. I don't dislike <em>'Jaws 3-D'</em> as much as most evidently do, though.

Dennis Quaid and Bess Armstrong are actually pleasant in terms of the cast, none of those behind them are anything worth noting but are somewhat serviceable. I will say I didn't enjoy the plot, but only because it lacked something worth watching - it's poor, not terrible. More of the shark was wanted, but I would personally say that about the preceding two films as well.

Parts of this 1983 flick that are terrible, though, are the special effects, especially right at the end. There is also some poorly done green screen and it, clearly, has a dire cover. There's no doubting this being made was a cash grab, that's basically the only reason to ever go 3-D, but a cash grab doesn't necessarily mean it's an awful film; which this isn't, in my opinion. It's simply bad. The cover is hilariously awful though, granted.

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

4 /10

Any fans of the original "Jaws" (1975), hell even of the sequel (1978) need not bother with this completely unrecognisable nonsense. Believe it or not, there is still one "Brody" - "Mike" (Dennis Quaid) who wants anything to do with the sea. His previous, death defying experiences haven't put him off! Anyway, he works at a newly opened sea world where a baby great white finds it's way in for a quick snack through a broken seagate. Where's mama, though? She can't be far away! The baby shark is captured, but swiftly dies and it is as if the big one knows, and let's just say she is seriously narked. Aside from some decent underwater photography, and some talented folks doing water-batics, it's a dreadful stain on the reputation of the franchise. The opening titles offer a clue to the 3-D effects, and I do recall sitting in the Odeon in Glasgow with my cardboard glasses on wondering what all the fuss was about 40 years ago. Now I know - it was all just a badly constructed, poorly acted gimmick that is as forgettable as it is terrible.

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